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Brexit Begins to Bite as Workers Turn to Voting With Their Feet

BOE Governor Carney has warned that the U.K. is at risk of facing net emigration, hurting the economy, in a disorderly departure.

Brexit Begins to Bite as Workers Turn to Voting With Their Feet
Anti-Brexit campaigners shout slogans outside the Houses of Parliament in the Westminster district of London. (Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg)

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For Julio Manuel Rios de la Rosa, Brexit changed everything.

The 28-year-old scientist arrived in Manchester five years ago and went on to work in a joint project of the university and AstraZeneca Plc. Although his contract had two more years to run, he quit and moved to Madrid in March, joining a small Spanish company testing cancer treatment.

“Before Brexit, I thought I would settle down in the U.K. because of its cutting-edge research, its global reach and the network,” Rios de la Rosa said. “But the idea of going through a tedious process of constant paperwork held me back.”

Brexit Begins to Bite as Workers Turn to Voting With Their Feet

Net immigration from the European Union to Britain fell to the lowest level in six years as the U.K. came closer to leaving the bloc and sterling dropped -- even as Prime Minister Theresa May sought to reassure workers their status was safe even in a no-deal scenario.

Brexit Begins to Bite as Workers Turn to Voting With Their Feet

Bank of England Governor Mark Carney has warned that the U.K. is at risk of facing net emigration, hurting the economy, in a worst-case scenario of a disorderly departure from the EU.

Since 2015, interest in British jobs among Europeans seeking work has dimmed, according to hiring website Indeed Inc, which tracks clicks on postings. Ireland and Poland led the decline.

“Our findings will make worrying reading for employers in the U.K.’s health-care and construction sectors,” said Pawel Adrjan, an economist at Indeed. “Both are already suffering skills shortages, and our research suggests this problem may worsen as more Europeans return to strong labor markets in their own countries or choose not to leave for the U.K. in the first place. ”

Citizens Leaving

It’s not just foreigners walking off. British geneticist Emma Bell, 28, is preparing to move to Toronto to work as a cancer researcher. She’s been thinking about leaving the U.K. since the Brexit referendum in 2016 -- three of her colleagues have already relocated to Germany.

“We need basic chemicals in order to do research and I have absolutely no confidence that we’re going to be able to get those in the year after March 29,” she said, referring to Brexit day. “That’s going to be detrimental to my career as well as cancer research in the U.K. for a good chunk of time.”

To be sure, many are still drawn to Britain. Some 273,000 more people arrived in the year to June than left, the Office for National Statistics said last month. Non-EU citizens made up the bulk of those numbers but net migration from the bloc remained positive as well.

Seeking to end lingering uncertainty, Brexit Secretary Stephen Barclay has guaranteed the rights of EU citizens and their family members to “continue to work, study and access benefits and services on the same basis as now” in the event of a no-deal Brexit.

Brexit Begins to Bite as Workers Turn to Voting With Their Feet

Yet May has said there will be no preference granted to EU nationals under Britain’s post-Brexit immigration regime, which will be based on skills and the needs of employers.

Rios de la Rosa has already made his decision.

“After the referendum, I was in shock, not only for the implications it had at a personal level -- if we would need a visa or not, for instance -- but also because the U.K. would be left out of research programs,” he said.

--With assistance from Jessica Shankleman and Anurag Kotoky.

To contact the reporters on this story: Dara Doyle in Dublin at ddoyle1@bloomberg.net;Irene García Pérez in London at igarciaperez@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Vidya Root at vroot@bloomberg.net, Jana Randow, Zoe Schneeweiss

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.